Two defining TB moments of the game imo were:
1. If you trace the ebb and flow of the game, the Falcons had been in control up until this run. The Patriots were shook, missing blocking assignments, dropping passes, down 25 with 25 to play. I think looking back, this was the moment that the Patriots (including the defence) remembered who their QB was and rallied to the tie and eventually the win. The Falcons began losing their grip on the game and ultimately never recovered.
2. With questions about the age of his arm going back as far as 2013, Brady leads another game winning drive which two back to back pinpoint deep-outs (from opposite hash marks no less). There's QBs playing in the NFL who can't make that throw with enough regularity for it to be included in the playbook.
While it is a marvel and impressive he had five championships. He and the city of Boston can thank the Hawks for the fourth SuperBowl win. That was probably the biggest choke job in SB history along with the Giants/Bills. IMO the Hawks should have never gotten so cute near the goalline and just handed the ball off to Lynch.
As for SB XLIX, that circumstances surrounding that play call have been lost to the hyperbole of the media and the emotion of Cris Collinsworth.
Seattle need a TD to win, and are on 2nd and goal at the 1. They're going to use all 4 downs to try to score but only have 1 timeout and there is only 27 seconds remaining. If they run it on second down and the patriots stop them, they need to use the timeout and third down has to be a pass or else they lose their 4th down to the clock. Better to throw it on 2nd down which if incomplete leaves you two snaps which can be either run or pass.
And considering A, that up until that point that NFL season, over 100 passes had been thrown from the 1 yard line for zero interceptions, and B, that they'd tried a run on a play earlier in the game where they needed 1 yard and Lynch had been stuffed, you can hardly fault Carroll's call so much as its execution. If there's anyone you should blame, it should be Kearse. He was lazy getting off the line, because he knew it wasn't coming to him, and got stuffed by Browner instead of screening Butler. If he explodes off the ball and gets even a slight rub on Butler, Lockette gets his ticket punched and Montana goes down as the greatest of all time.